49 Mich. 407 | Mich. | 1882
Plaintiff recovered judgment in the court; below for the value of logs taken from his land by defendants. Defendants relied on the purchase of the logs in the tree from parties who held an old tax title. This tax title it seems to be conceded on all sides was void ; but defendants insist that it should be taken into, the account for its bearing on the damages; the case being one in which the good faith of the parties might be taken into account by the jury. They therefore offered evidence which they claim tended to show that this title was investigated by counsel and pronounced good before the purchase; but the proposed evidence appears to have been mere hearsay, and was properly excluded.
The defendants also offered to show at what price
The principal question in the case relates to the quantity of logs taken from the plaintiff’s land. The boundary of the land on one side was in dispute, and the true boundary perhaps depends upon the proper construction of a federal statute respecting public surveys. We do not pass-upon the question for the reason that in the opinion of my brethren it is not necessarily involved. After the case had gone to judgment plaintiff filed a remittur of a part of the damages;' intending to make it sufficiently large to cover the value of the logs cut on the ground in dispute. My brethren think the record sufficiently shows that the remittur was sufficient, and was for a proportion of the damages-corresponding to the proportion of logs taken from the land in dispute. This being so, if the court- committed any error in the rulings respecting the boundary, — which however we do not say or intimate is the fact, — the error has become immaterial.
No other error appears in the case, and the judgment must be affirmed.